The following is a summary of the land ownership status at that time based on the map of Chuo-ku history map and Nihonbashi in 1874, a map of Meiji 6 (1874).
In addition, the gu ticket is a land sale certificate, and the landlord name, area, and gu ticket height (land price) are specified for each land parcel.
(ground) Number) (number of parcels) (number of landowners) (area / tsubo) (composition ratio / percentage) (gu ticket height / yen) (unit price / tsubo / yen)
1-1, Hakozakicho 1 1 945 3.1 6,500 6.88
2-1-17 17 13 1,879 6.1 4,602 2.45
2-18 1 1 2,835 9.2 981 0.35
3-1 1 1 8,085 26.2 ー ー
4-1 1 1 13,433 43.5 4,649 0.35
Hakozaki-cho Subtotal 21 17 27,177 88.1 16,732 0.62
1-21 21 Kita-Shinboricho 14 3,673 11.9 19,100 5.20
Total 42 31 30,850 100.0 35,832 1.16
Former samurai land total 3 3 24,353 78.9 5,630 0.23
Total town area 39 28 6,497 21.1 30,302 1.16
(Note) 1. 1-1 Hakozaki-cho :Owned by Mitsui Hachiemon
2.2-18, Hakozakicho: Former Seki-juku feudal lord Kuze House
3.3-1, Hakozakicho :Pioneering Envoy Lending House (public land) Former Doi Daikan / Matsudaira Izu House
4.4-1, Hakozakicho :Former Tosa feudal lord Yamauchi House
At the time of the year following the residence of the Daimyo clan, this data can be seen as it reflects the actual conditions of the region during the Edo period.
The ratio of samurai and town areas is almost 80 to 20, and the average ratio of Edo city areas is 75 samurai areas, while the shrines and towns are 15 each, so the composition ratio can be said to be almost the same as the average.
The average area per block from 2-1 to 17 Hakozaki-cho is 111 tsubo, while Kita-Shinbori-cho is 175 tsubo, and the scale gap is 1.58 times.